I imagine that for some children, and even adults, the thought of becoming a dragon is quite attractive. A mythical being with magical powers and the ability to fly and breathe fire, who wouldn’t want that? Although Andy, a teenage boy, has never imagined what transforming into a dragon would be like, in a quirky twist of fate, he does just that in Becoming the Dragon. The story starts off relatively slow and mundane, following Andy through his “normal” life for about a third of the book, until the event that changes forever the life he’s known. Although Andy is no stranger to bizarre occurrences, this one takes the cake. This is where the story quickly becomes intriguing. In a time and place completely foreign to Andy, he must navigate his
way through various adventurous pitfalls until he becomes a young dragon. It then chronicles the beginning of his dragon life. The story ends at the perfect point to lead into the next book in the series, with questions unanswered and new adventures on the horizon. This is a very unique story, which I truly enjoyed. The imagery and storytelling were fantastic. While some parts were somewhat boring and long-winded, I believe it was most likely necessary information for the continuation of the story. About the only thing I didn’t like about the book was the beginning. Not only was it extremely dull, in my opinion, but it was also riddled with punctuation errors. I was actually dreading reading the rest of it because I was afraid the entire book was going to be like that. I was pleasantly surprised and pleased when the story turned into something else entirely and the errors became less frequent. I rate this book 3 out of 4 stars simply because I found more than 10 errors in the book. Although most of them were punctuation, they did stand out. If I was rating this book for the story alone, I would definitely give it 4 stars. This book is classified as a teenage/young adult novel, and I agree that it is appropriate for that age group. However, this is a story that I believe anyone, of any age, could enjoy. It is a delightful fantasy tale full of wondrous creatures, people, and places. Honestly, I could have sat and read the book in one sitting had time permitted me to do so. I found myself wanting to know what would happen next. I can’t wait to read the rest of the series.
Carole Wilkinson’s Dragonkeeper impressed me with its writing style and incredible settings. She uses very rich vocabularies and analogies which help to imagine the towns, villages, and environment of old China. In addition, there were hidden settings and these become apparent at the end of the story. When I found out the hidden settings, I recognized the characters’ unusual behaviors. Ping who is the protagonist of this book learns a lot of important things with her friends while their thrilling and wonderful journey
Before going to Alaska, Chris McCandless had failed to communicate with his family while on his journey; I believe this was Chris’s biggest mistake. Chris spent time with people in different parts of the nation while hitchhiking, most of them whom figured out that McCandless kept a part of him “hidden”. In chapter three, it was stated that Chris stayed with a man named Wayne Westerberg in South Dakota. Although Westerberg was not seen too often throughout the story, nevertheless he was an important character. Introducing himself as Alex, McCandless was in Westerberg’s company for quite some time: sometimes for a few days, other times for several weeks. Westerberg first realized the truth about Chris when he discovered his tax papers, which stated that “McCandless’s real name was Chris, not Alex.” Wayne further on claims that it was obvious that “something wasn’t right between him and his family” (Krakauer 18). Further in the book, Westerberg concluded with the fact that Chris had not spoken to his family “for all that time, treating them like dirt” (Krakauer 64). Westerberg concluded with the fact that during the time he spent with Chris, McCandless neither mentioned his
Andy goes back to school and talks to his basketball coach about how he feels about Rob's death and how his fiends and family feel about the accident. In addition, they discuss Andy's sentence because Andy keeps punishing himself for Rob's death. Everybody at school was crying during Rob's memorial service. Grief Counselors from downtown come to the school to try to get the kids to share their feelings.
Once leaving the unknown, our hero, according to his/her circumstances must face his demons by slaying the dragon. It is now our hero overcomes to be a better version of himself/herself. Slaying the dragon is something the hero probably ran from their entire life up until this point. It’s what has scared our hero the most.
Dr. Luther King Jr stated,“This is the most important and crucial period in your lives, for what you do now and what you decide not at this age may well determine which way your life shall go.” In the satirical fairy tale Dealing with dragons, written by Patricia Wrede Cimorene, the princess of Linderwall is a great example for this quote because she goes on crazy adventures. Cimorene was justified in showing apathy toward the expected social norms of her day because she helped save the dragons, escaped a life she did not enjoy, and she was able to avoid marrying someone she did not love.
During the gruesome and bloody Spanish Civil War, tens of thousands of innocent civilians and refugees died, but even more shocking, close to 200,000 people were deliberately executed (Hochschild). In the 2006 film Pan’s Labyrinth, Ofelia is a young girl living in Spain after the war who, along with her pregnant mother, joins the family of Captain Vidal. He is the sadistic leader of a Fascist regime and Ofelia’s new abusive step-father. A lover of fairy tales, Ofelia fantasizes that she is secretly a princess who must complete three tasks in order to escape her current reality and return to her true home in the underworld. During the movie, she is faced with the harsh realities of war and death, which are mirrored in the creatures she faces during her mystical endeavors. Director Guillermo del Toro along with cinematographer Guillermo Navaro and editor Bernet Vilaplana perfectly personify the cruelness she experiences almost an hour into the film with Ofelia’s encounter of the horrifying Pale Man, an eyeless creature with an
The very beginning of the novel The Death Cure by James Dashner starts off with Thomas, the protagonist, trapped in a solid white room. He is trapped there for months. As he is in the room, he may have thought “ Oh, me, myself and I, solo ride until I die” (G-Eazy). This is a lyric from G-Eazy’s Me, Myself and I. The song is about being alone and not wanting to be with no one. Although Thomas does wish to see and to somebody, he goes perseveres through his problems just like the singer in the song.
The book opens up at the office of a professor named Burris. A former student of his, Rogers, and his friend, Steve, arrive at his office. They are disturbed by the current state of life in America and have come to Burris to ask him about the utopia that he had once discussed in class. Rodgers got his inspiration from an article written by a man named Frazier. It turns out Frazier, a friend of Burris’s from graduate school, is also where Burris got his ideas. Burris sends
In T.H. White's Once and Future King, fate plays a very important role in Arthur's life when he meets Merlyn and Merlyn becomes his mentor. When they first met, Arthur was confused as to why Merlyn was going all the way home with him until Merlyn said, "Why not? How else can I be your tutor?" (37) Arthur realizes he had been on a quest to find his tutor. This quote is important to the theme because it was Arthur's first quest on his journey towards king. This reason this quote is so important is because Merlyn is preparing Arthur to become a great leader. After all of Arthur's training with Merlyn, Merlyn tells Arthur that he might not know it yet but he will be, "Hic jacet Arthutus Rex quandum Rexque futurus... The Once and Future King." (287) This quote foreshadows that Arthur, will in fact, become the great leader. If it were not for training with Merlyn, he would not be the great leader he developed into throughout the book.
The main idea of the book was a girl learning to cope with her past and and trying to grow from it. Charlie starts of in a mental institution for self-harm. She is then taken out of the place because of her mother’s lack of money. She goes to Arizona to be helped out by her friend Mikey, which is gone most of the time. Charlie gets a job at a weird coffee place and meets a guy named Riley, where they instantly get a connection. The rest of the book is Charlie trying to learn how to deal with all of her past hardships and find a better way to deal with the memories and pain. The only two coping methods she seemed
In the novel, Dealing with Dragons by Patricia C. Wrede, the main character Cimorene is not acting like a proper princess.Cimorene does not want to be a proper princess like her sisters and be forced to get married to prince Therandil.Cimorene is everything a princessis not suppost to be,like Cimorene is tomboyish,smart,and sometimes bored.Dealing with Dragons is about a princess named Cimorene,but the princess does not want to act like a proper princess.So she goes to another castle on a vacation with her family,but they realy want Cimorene to get married to a prince that she never meet, so Cimorene runs away to ask some dragons what she should do.Cimorene ends ups living with a dragon named Kazul so she didnt have to be like a proper princess and do what she pleases.This is the reasons for Cimorene not acting like a justified princess.Cimorene is justified in ignoring the expected social norms of her day,because she doesn’t like to do princess thing she likes to learn magic,ect.
deviant they could be labeled deviant in an environment where their dissociation with society and their lifestyle may be viewed as dysfunctional because they do not prefer living in the safety of the pride lands.
To begin, the narrator discovers the fact that he has been and will be stuck in poverty for the rest of his life. When the young man went to the market to buy an attractive girl he liked a pot, he discovered truly just how simple he has been living his whole childhood. You see the young woman said she could not come with him on his adventure so he said to her that he would bring her something. When he got on the train, he strugg...
...pposed to kiss Mary Elizabeth but he didn't so she broke up with Charlie) leaving him back at the start, with no friends. This was a bad time because Charlie begins to start going “bad” again which means he starts to have flashbacks, and he gets really depressed. He saves Patrick from a fight at school which is kind of like a forgiveness from his friends to let him hang out and talk to them again. Charlie helps Sam get into a college and soon all of his friends leave to go to college. He gets bad again and ends up going to the hospital. When Sam and Patrick come over to Charlie's house, this is like closure to Charlie and they drive through the tunnel for the closing page. I think that the author did a very good job in choosing when the events in the book would happen. It seemed like a teenagers life and he changed it up some so that the reader wouldn't get so bored.
The book began in a small coffee shop. Zach was sitting at a corner table waiting for his mother to pick him up when two boys with guns burst in and told everyone to stay calm. The boys went straight to the cashier and told the girl to give them all of the money. While the boys were at the cash register Zach saw that a lady parked in a blue car called someone, then drove away. As the cashier was shoving the cash into bags that the boys had handed her, the cops rolled up so the boys made everyone go in the back storage room. There were nine hostages, Zach, two middle aged businessmen, a mother and daughter, the cashier and the coffee boy, and two older ladies who smelled like soap.